Chattanooga Times Free Press

QAnon believers struggle with D.C. happenings

- BY KEVIN ROOSE

Followers of QAnon, the proTrump conspiracy theory, have spent weeks anticipati­ng that Wednesday would be the “Great Awakening” — a day, long foretold in QAnon prophecy, when top Democrats would be arrested for running a global sex traffickin­g ring and President Donald Trump would seize a second term in office.

But as President Joe Biden took office and Trump landed in Florida, with no mass arrests in sight, some believers struggled to harmonize the falsehoods with the inaugurati­on on their TVs.

Some QAnon believers tried to rejigger their theories to accommodat­e a transfer of power to Biden. Several large QAnon groups discussed on Wednesday the possibilit­y that they had been wrong about Biden, and that the incoming president was actually part of Trump’s effort to take down the global cabal.

“The more I think about it, I do think it’s very possible that Biden will be the one who pulls the trigger,” one account wrote in a QAnon channel on the messaging app Telegram.

Others expressed anger with QAnon influencer­s who had told believers to expect a dramatic culminatio­n on Inaugurati­on Day.

“A lot of YouTube journalist­s have just lost one hell of a lot of credibilit­y,” wrote a commenter in one QAnon chat room.

Still others attempted to shift the goal posts, and simply told their fellow “anons” to hang on and wait for future, unspecifie­d developmen­ts.

“Don’t worry about what happens at 12 p.m.,” wrote one QAnon influencer. “Watch what happens after that.”

And some appeared to realize that they’d been duped.

“It’s over,” one QAnon chat room participan­t wrote, just after Biden’s swearing-in.

“Wake up,” another wrote. “We’ve been had.”

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